Firmware Configuration Framework ================================ This document provides an overview of the |FCONF| framework. Introduction ~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Firmware CONfiguration Framework (|FCONF|) is an abstraction layer for platform specific data, allowing a "property" to be queried and a value retrieved without the requesting entity knowing what backing store is being used to hold the data. It is used to bridge new and old ways of providing platform-specific data. Today, information like the Chain of Trust is held within several, nested platform-defined tables. In the future, it may be provided as part of a device blob, along with the rest of the information about images to load. Introducing this abstraction layer will make migration easier and will preserve functionality for platforms that cannot / don't want to use device tree. Accessing properties ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Properties defined in the |FCONF| are grouped around namespaces and sub-namespaces: a.b.property. Examples namespace can be: - (|TBBR|) Chain of Trust data: tbbr.cot.trusted_boot_fw_cert - (|TBBR|) dynamic configuration info: tbbr.dyn_config.disable_auth - Arm io policies: arm.io_policies.bl2_image - GICv3 properties: hw_config.gicv3_config.gicr_base Properties can be accessed with the ``FCONF_GET_PROPERTY(a,b,property)`` macro. Defining properties ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Properties composing the |FCONF| have to be stored in C structures. If properties originate from a different backend source such as a device tree, then the platform has to provide a ``populate()`` function which essentially captures the property and stores them into a corresponding |FCONF| based C structure. Such a ``populate()`` function is usually platform specific and is associated with a specific backend source. For example, a populator function which captures the hardware topology of the platform from the HW_CONFIG device tree. Hence each ``populate()`` function must be registered with a specific ``config_type`` identifier. It broadly represents a logical grouping of configuration properties which is usually a device tree file. Example: - TB_FW: properties related to trusted firmware such as IO policies, base address of other DTBs, mbedtls heap info etc. - HW_CONFIG: properties related to hardware configuration of the SoC such as topology, GIC controller, PSCI hooks, CPU ID etc. Hence the ``populate()`` callback must be registered to the (|FCONF|) framework with the ``FCONF_REGISTER_POPULATOR()`` macro. This ensures that the function would be called inside the generic ``fconf_populate()`` function during initialization. :: int fconf_populate_topology(uintptr_t config) { /* read hw config dtb and fill soc_topology struct */ } FCONF_REGISTER_POPULATOR(HW_CONFIG, topology, fconf_populate_topology); Then, a wrapper has to be provided to match the ``FCONF_GET_PROPERTY()`` macro: :: /* generic getter */ #define FCONF_GET_PROPERTY(a,b,property) a##__##b##_getter(property) /* my specific getter */ #define hw_config__topology_getter(prop) soc_topology.prop This second level wrapper can be used to remap the ``FCONF_GET_PROPERTY()`` to anything appropriate: structure, array, function, etc.. Loading the property device tree ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ``fconf_load_config()`` must be called to load the device tree containing the properties' values. This must be done after the io layer is initialized, as the |DTB| is stored on an external device (FIP). .. uml:: ../resources/diagrams/plantuml/fconf_bl1_load_config.puml Populating the properties ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Once a valid device tree is available, the ``fconf_populate(config)`` function can be used to fill the C data structure with the data from the config |DTB|. This function will call all the ``populate()`` callbacks which have been registered with ``FCONF_REGISTER_POPULATOR()`` as described above. .. uml:: ../resources/diagrams/plantuml/fconf_bl2_populate.puml